So, there is something really abstract about thousands and thousands of people being into somthing that I did years and years ago. Although we all move on in life I would like to thank you all for being my friends and for being into the music and the ideas, means a lot.

He goes on to announce that his project The Lost Patrol Band will soon be releasing their sophomore full length and follow up to 2005's The Lost Patrol Band. Titled Automatic, the record is due out October 16th in Europe and some new material is available on the band's myspace page.

Lyxen has also launched his own label, Ny Våg which will release the vinyl for the record as well as host a new podcast which promises "old and new punk / powerpop and Hardcore music."

Finally, he adds that he and his former Refused bandmate David Sandström may soon be collaborating on a new project with more details on that expected soon.

to the numnut above-dennis wasn't even in text, second-that text record is in fact one of the best things the three other guys ever did. You apparently only listen to one style of music and are young and will learn.

Hey numb nuts, where did I say Dennis was in it? I said it was a collaboration of ex members of the band.
If that's the best shit the other guys did, it's no wonder Dennis stays on his own.
And, I'm actually older, been into the refused since the early/mid90s and like a lot of different kinds of music. That record is unlistenable.

well, it started out just being lost patrol, and that was basically dennis with an acoustic guitar and some friends playing drums on a few tracks and doing some back up vocals. but then it became like an actual full band, as opposed to more of a solo project, and the style of music also changed quite a bit. the first album is by far the best stuff he's done with this whole project.

I read a review of the newest Lost Patrol album in either Punk Planet or Skyskraper and the reviewer pretty much called Denis a genre-hopping capitalist. Playing Refused when hardcore was in and Lost Patrol when singer/songwriter stuff is in, etc. I don't agree with it at all, but I do find it an interesting perspective, any thoughts?

He kind of pre-dated the trends though. Harcore's in a big revival now, but Refused broke up in 1999. Singer-songwriter stuff never, ever goes away so anyone claiming to "hop on the new trend" with that is kind of dumb. The giant 'Garage Rock' revival was in 2002, and (I) was already together for three years by then.